58 , . '.' .'1 4.: .::: w.... "* 1 : : . :' ;0:0:, .. .. .wear it and yo u sti r up a storm! oE:.. ..".,. --'L ': - 1fAiitls \wGh<_;' f - ...! - '" 1 0;$ .) :"" '" " '^."'. Perfume 2.50, 10.00, 18.50 Cologne Suprême 2.50, 4.00 PRfCES PLUS TAX Also in Bath Powder and Cologne Spray Mist DuBARRY NEW YORK · PARIS from the island are living up here without men but with broods of lIttle children, and A.D.C. appears to be a natural for them. Moreover, there is a temptation to fake the pattern, by hav- ing the man of the house leave if he is not earning much money (in that case, de- sertion lS the better part of chivalry) or by having him hide out when the Wel- fare Department's inspector is due to come around. If the Department is tipped off to such a case, it sometimes tries to check on it by staging a visit just hefore dawn-a practice that some New York social workers feel smacks of the Gestapo but that does help keep the wel- fare rolls down. In many cases, no doubt, A.D.C. can be called sheer para- <fi sitism from the city's viewpoint, and the children concerned might be better off back in Puerto Rico. Home relief is :A something else again; it goes to workers, by and large, and they claim it because their wages are not on a scale that the welfare state itself deems suitable in this time and place. When it comes to public housing- another boon of the welfare state here-the Puerto Ricans don't do so well. A few months ago, the New York City Housing Authority had about ninety-three thousand families in its various projects, and forty-six per cent of them were of mainland white origin, thirty-nine per cent of malnland Negro origin, and only fifteen per cent of Puerto Rican origin. This means that the Puerto Ricans are getting only about half as much public housing per capita as the Negroes. One reason is that many Puerto Ricans haven't been here long enough to qualIfy; two years of residence in the city are demanded by the rules Another is the language prob- lem, combined with the Puerto Ricans' dislike of paper forms, and a third is the frequen t informality of their marriages. (It sometimes happens that a couple who have been legally married will choose to conceal the fact so that the wife can draw A.D.C. In fact, which to choose-A. D.C. or housing-is said to be a dilemma for many Puerto Rican slum households now.) Finally, and ironically, a number of Puerto Ri- can families are kept out of public hous- ing because they are too large; in ac- cepting applicants for its quarters, the Housing Authority usually insists on a limit of two persons per bedroom, and this may prevent a big family from leav- ing, say, a two-room private flat for a four-room flat in a project-often, of course, to the family's great bewilder- ment. Altogether, the Puerto Ricans here DECEMßE.I\ 2. I, I 9 5 7 .. .. "'"" .... <I 'l.' :( * : .... < /i , Ô {Jt:t" y :';" ", :r- , . ,:' :<-k :'" . .-;. ' ... p 'v """ ".,:. ð ":-"::-==""",,,- r "':'" , " . , ''''" -- s , " ' . - ." v . :"., .', ,,,:,. .,' " :: ; ,,' l} ' ",,\,t\' <">. \. \.. .""i .-...., J. () - . ".Ul "":""":'" ,,',',,' 0x/,.a J},:I.' ., r Jj)(u./;/i IlfJ ,-. .1"'.fJl"l( ' ".:".. r J'i,,(: . \ . .. .... <. ' $... GOLD SEAL VINEYARDS.INC.HAMMONDSPORT.N.Y @ 1957 by CHEMEX CORP. 41 MurraySt.,NewYork (7) , ,'" .. ....: -: '.P " ' , < ,,( >> , 0( .- : .. Heavy Swedish crystal bowl (10 oz.) with sterling dress- ing spoon, $13.50. Also available: Pair of salt dishes with spoons, $10.50; dessert bowl (1 qt.) with spoon, $29.50, and large bowl (2 qts.) with all-silver serving set, $59.00. Fed. Tax and shipping included. H. Nils Danish Silver Now at 573 Madison Ave. (57 St.) N. Y. 22